The Western herald. (Auraria, Lumpkin County, Ga.) 1833-1???, December 21, 1833, Image 3

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object to the jurisdiction of the Court, over such cases he shall for the said offence, be fined and imprisoned ns for contempt of Court. The bill to incorporate 16 academies in the counties of Cobb, Floyd, Gilmer Lumpkin, Murray, Morgan, Putnam, Union, Jasper, Lib erty, Warren, Wilkes, Upson, and Laurens, were passed. IIOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Tuesday, Dec. 3. The House suspended the consideration of the Penal Code and devoted the evening to the reading bills the second time. Wednesday, Dec. 4. Evening Session. —Resumed the consider ation of the Penal Code. The order tvns suspended to pass a resolu tion to place in the lottery wheel certain lots that have been drawn by mistake, and others that were at the other drawing accidentally left out. The Senate took up and passed, the bill to provide for taking the census of the ten new counties, and to distribute the poor school lund in those counties according to white popu lations. The Senate went into committee of the whole, on the bill for a Convention to reduce and equalize t'nc representation in the State Legislature. The committee having reported disagreement to the bill, on motion ofMr. Free man of Franklin, the report was laid on the ta ble for the balance of the session. The House progressed with the Penal Code till adjournment, having proceeded as far as to the 18th Section of the 10th Division. Thuesday, Dec. 5. Except occasional suspensions of the order for the admission of motions, petitions and re ports, the house was engaged the whole day on the penal code. A motion was made to allow Mr. Hardeman of Oglethorpe, to report a bill so to alter the constitution, as to enable the Legislature to provide by law, that the Superior Courts may change the venue, whenever justice may re quire, that trials for felonies should be had in other counties than in those in which they may have been committed. Friday, Dec. 6. On a motion of Mr. Starke to reconsider the vote of yesterday which refused to strike out the clause of the Penal Code which punished profane swearing, the tendency of such laws and the policy of interfering by positive legis lation for the interests of morality, were con sidered in a discussion between Messrs. Starke, King of Mclntosh, King of Greene, Clayton, Bradford, and Williamson. Adjourned till 3 o,clock, P. M. TilK WESTERN IGRALS). AoR.AR.IA, GEORGIA, DECEMBER2I 1833. The Friends and Members of the State Rights Association, of Hits county, are requested to at tend a meeting, to be lielden at the Miners Ilall in this place, on Saturday the 28th Inst, at half past 6 o’clock, I*. M. The Committee to whom was referred the drafting of a Consti tution and l>ye-Tjaws, for the go vernment of the Association, are requested to assemble at the same hour and place, on Thursday the 26th inst. We are requested to say that in publishing the reso lutions of the State R ights Party of this place, i.i our last number, we made a mistake in attributing the resolu lion for their publication, to A. Mathews, Lsq. The re solution was offered by H. B. Shaw, Esq. —: 2 &2R • The length of the President’s Message, must be our apology for the want of variety in this week’s paper. -■TZCgOR- Snow Storm. —The Citizens of our town are now ex periencing all the disagreeable concomitants of a fall of snow—the thawing and melting, have been going on for several days, to the great annoyance of those who have been compelled to plod through our muddy streets. Ma tty of the Miners have bean compelled to suspend their operations during this inclemency. On Monday, we bad an incessant fall of snow during the whole day. It lay in this place at the depth of six inches, and it would probably have been deeper, had not the earth been satu rated by moisture from a preceeding rain. The Moun tains :n our neighborhood have exhibited a beautiful ap pearance—dressed in the spotless robes of winter, and eating their hoary heads, in towering grandeur, they re flect from the glittering foliage of their forest covered summits, the dazzling glories of the “ King of Day.” No t'ung indeed can present more magnificent beauty, than the frost work which now so richly ornaments the leaf-. Has groves, in our mountainous vicinity. —; 2RS — ■S/gf Rights.- The friends of State Bights, will bear u mind the importance of their united action, and give] jPcir attendance on the 28th. Our object is patriotic and ; ‘todable—we believe in the honesty of tho people, and, ’ -at if they err, it will be an error of judgment, ratherthan the heart. But many of the honest and industrious of kscountry, and particularly ofthe Cherokee section, have PM the means afforded them of information upon the fan eantental, and leading principles of our government. Tbep# need only to be understood by the people, to keet wUh their hearty concurrence and undivided sup lott Their willingness to wield their sovereignty in sup pert of the country, and its republican forms and institu -ois, is well known to those whose hypocritical subtlety, Mitle m act argued upon the policy of a protective sys -1 a ’> Stt *opan!y avowed to be for the purpose of protection, as “an act tot* the raising of revcuue;’’aud who with the Constitution in their hands, and the magic watch word “ Union” in their mouths, would tear away the pil lars that support our glorious fabric of republican liberty. These men—these Proclamation demagogues, with “ Union” in their mouths, and envious ambition rankling in their breasts, would with deceptive terms,blind those in whom reside the sovereignty, thestr-ngthand the preser vation of the government, and wantonly induce them to prove their own destroyers, by a renunciation of those rights upon which their prosperity, republicanism and i liberty, are based. The great abject of this a soeiation is to enlighten the people upon national politics. Many have not the means afforded, by a perusal of the various political periodicals, but by this association, we shall he able to disseminate instruction at a trifling expense j expo3o the simplicity l of our government, and show what a complex, unnatu ral, and complicated form it would be, to meet the views of the consolidationists, alias “ Union men.” We have every thing to gain, and nothing to lose by a fair expo sure of our principles—*tis our enemies have shrouded our views with their metaphysical gloom. They have ever avoided discussion—the field of argument is noplace, for them; they oppose irresistible truths,by telling us how bitter is their prejudice against some ol'our leaders. But the era has arrived when principles, not men, are to be maintained in Georgia, And onpe let the republicans of Georgia have their principles distinctly understood —let them tare away the mysterious complexity in which their enemies would entangle them—Let thesovereign people ; know what arc the doctrines of the true Republican 1 school: and State Rights men, you are more than con querors. —: 2gOgt :— Presidents Message.—-' This is a well written document, the style of which would alone cnsuie it attention. It is principally filled with details of our foreign affairs. The tenter seems to have been in an economical mood; we do not censure him for that, but still his fears that the great reduction about to take place in the tariff, would too suddenly curtail the resources of the government's ra ther ill timed Vet all might answer well enough, but that the President is pleased to speak of the Post Office Department, and let the people answer, if here they arc fairly and candidly dealt with? Can the President, with all his omnipotence, bind a man hand and foot, cast him into prison, and whilst in that state, induce him to believe that he is free, and make him boast of his free dom ? As easily can the President do this, as make the people believe, that the late arrangements made in the Post Office Department, are not of deleterious inconven ience to them? L it of small importance to the people of Georgia, that the facilities of communication between two of their most important Commercial Marts in the State, have been reduced from a daily , to atri-wcekly mail route. ■ and that too, when she, the state of Georgia, has demon stratively she wn, that she pays a greater proportion for the mail carriage through her state, than any other state intlieUuion? And are the inhabitants, or business men of Augusta and Savannah, those alone who are injured by this economical arrangement ? Let the Cotton growers and merchants of the up-country and all mediately or im mediately interested through them; sco to it, that th are not sooner or later made sensibly to feel that them selves arc interested, deeply interested in this matter. But we are told for our consolation, that the Post Office Department is insolvent, aud has been so for years ! Can the people be thus liumbuged ? why did not tlus same Pre sident tell us so before ? Has ke just found it out? Ch are the people blind to the fact, that their well tried ser vauts, those whom themselves had recommended and sustained, have ruthlessly, and regardless of its expense, been hurled from the various P. Offices, to make room for Jackson, alias Proclamation men; and is it any wonder if after such confusion in the Post Office Department, it should discover the fact, that it was insolvent ? The Post Office. —The following para graph is extracted from the Cincinnati Com mercial Advertiser of the 15th inst. “We have the most astonishing intelligence, from a source in which we place the most im plicit confidence which is that the deficiency in the Post Office Department, amounts to the enorrniius sum of upwards of EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS!!!” —: 2R&? •’ — Troup ami the Force Bill. —Let the Troup, Union, Force Bill men read this letter from Gov. Troup, and then say that he participated in the infamy they would fain make the people believe. Let them say if Troup’s principles arc those of Forsyth aud “ Jim Crow,” and let them say, ice arc Troup men; “ see how we apples swim.” “ Darien, Ist Dec. 1833, “ . Os the miscon structions and misrepresentations, .connected with every thing I write, you aro not insensible, so that if I had been wilfully and deliberately mysterious in all things ever written or spoken, and conspicuously distinguished for ambiguity of purpose, and indirection of conduct all my life, I could not have expected any thing worse—take, for example the instance to which you emphatically call my attention, —“the impression is attempted to be made that you (I) would have voted for the Force Bill ofthe last Congress, if you (I) had been in your (my) seat.” I went from my chamber to the capitol, at an early hour of the afternoon and suffering much pain, kept my seat until midnight when I voted against the Force Bill —if on mxj death bed, I would have been carried there, to vote against it, —because it presented the strange political phenomenon of a mere Government, treating a Sovereign State as if that State were a corporation or an unlawful assemblage o( in dividuals. The vote was recorded and pub lished in all the newspapers of the day, and yet it is attempted to make the impression, that I would have voted for the Force Bill if I had been in my seat. So the world goes. Yourfriend, very truly. G. M. TROUP.” -:2£2e-- The selection ofa Congressional Ticket to be suppor ted by the State Rights party at the ensuing election, meets with our hearty concurrence and approbation. They are all gentlemen of known talents and tried in tegrity! Some of them have served us long and faithful ly. From the uncompromising republicanism, and exal ted talents ofthe others, we have every thing to promise ourselves. The following are the gentlemen selected: Messrs. Richard H. Wilde, Roger 1.. Gamble, George R.‘Gilmer, Seaborn Jones, William C. Daniell, Thomas F. Foster, Daniel Newnan, Absolem H. Chappell and j Mirabcauß. Lamar, each having received tw6 thirds ofj the votes given. Judge Clayton declined a nomination—al ter which the following resolutions were in troduced and adopted—on motion of Mr. Alford, Resolved, That from the known patriotism and republican principles of the gentlemen nominated, it is taken for granted that they all approve without reservation of the pto ceedings of the meeting of the State Rights party of Georgia, held in the State House on the 13th ult. and the principles adopted thereat. Resolved, That a Committee be appointed to furnish each gentleman, nominated, with a copy of the proceedings of this meeting; and request him to make known to them his acceptance or non acceptance of the nomination, and permit his reply to be published, for the information of the people. The Chairman appointed Dr. George A. Brown, John Williams, and Samuel Rockwell, Esqs. the Committees. On motion of Mr. Cooper Unanimously tesolved, That we recommend to the people of the United States, Col. George M. Troup, as a suitable candidate for the next Presiden cy. His zea'ioua advocacy of, and firm at tachment to, the principles of State Rights, designate him us the individual best calcula ted to promote the repnblican doctrines wc ad vocate. On motion of Mr. Young, Resolved, That the proceedings of this meeting be published in the State rights papers in this State. The meeting then adjourned. THOMAS MITCHELL, Chair. N. C. Sayre, ) c t at ii’ J secretary. J. N. WILLIAMSON, J TOR THE WESTERN HERA 1.0. J\lr. Editor —When I first read the annun ciation of the Honorable President of the Senate, stating that “Wilson Governor was elected the Lumpkin ot Goorgia,” I presumed it was a mere mistake, a kind oflapstis linguae which great men like himself, when a little confused some times full into. Bu. on more reflection I have tho ught it not impossible that it was by design, and that his Excellency, has determined that our chief magistrates are in future to be called the “Lumpkins” in imitation o! imperial Rome, who called her emperors “the Ctcsars” after Julius Catsar assumed the purple, if so at the end of the next two years we may probably j have “Jim Crow,” Augustus “Lumpkin” and in due time “Potters Clay” may be the Tiberias “Lumpkin,” should this be the case, as it was said of Nero that he never told the truth. I leave for those who are best acquainted with the present “Lumpkin of Georgia” to deter mine whether the same may not be truly said of him. POWHATAN. CONGRESS. ELECTION OF SPEAKER. The House proceeded to ballot for a Speak er. Messrs. CLAY, of Alabama, and JAR VIS, of Maine, acting as Tellers. Upon the first ballot it appeared that the whole number of votes given was 218, of which 110 were ne cessary to a choice. The Hon. Andrew Stevenson, of Va. having 142 votes, was declared to be duly elected. ELECTION OF CLERK. On motion of Mr. MANN, the House then proceeded to the election of a Clerk. Mr: MANN nominated Walter S. Frank lin, of Pennsylvania. Mr. KING nominated Mathew St. Clair Clarke, of Pennsylvania. A message was received from the Senate that the House was organized and ready to proceed to business. The House then pro ceeded to a third ballot for Clerk, when it ap peared that 229 votes were given, ofwhich Mr. Walter S. Franklin received 117 votes, and M. St. Clair Clarke 110, whereupon, W. S. Frank lin was declared duly elected, having received a ■majority of the whole number. Adjourned till to-morrow at 12 o’clock. Members of Congress arehurrying to the seat of Government —among others, who have pas sed through this place, was Col. Crockett, who attracted no little attention. We heard him avow his determination to make his fiend Major Downing, cut the President’s acquain tance. He says he is too honest a fellow to be subjected to the contamination of the Kitchen Cabinet. The Colonel also disclaims all Knowledge of the work, which has lately made its appearance, purporting to be his Memoirs. He had no hand in preparing the volume, and expressed himself indignantly at the liberty thus taken with his character.— Fred. Arena. Resignation of Dr Cooper. —This gentleman has tendered to the Trustees, his resignation as President of the South Carolina College. He will be retained as lecturer on Chemistry, and we have been informed that he intends opening a law school. We earnestly hope he may be indueed to do so.—llia eminent talents as a Lecturer and his undisputed quallifications, ia every respect, to fill a station of this kind, ren der it extremely desirable that this designshould be encouraged. In the capacity of Lecturer on Chemistry, he dill be diveated of all his power as one of the College authorities. Thus the College, can no longer be said to be under the influence of Dr. Cooper.—Col. Times. From Ihe Times. Vi c, the undersigned to whom has been . referred the settlement of the unhappy affair | existing between Col. Wm. Ward and Mi. Robert McCombs, have had an nicer view with both. Col. Ward states that when he went to the house of Mr. McCombs, he went there with ; no hostile view; that he neither meditated or - expected an attack that he was entirely Uttar-- : med, that his sole object in interfering in the I affray between Mr. McCombs and Mr. Byroin Was to prevent serious injury to either, inwhich - effort he was shot by- Mr. MdCombs, and under the circumstance he cannot but regret the occurrence. Mr. McCombs states, that he too regrets the occurrence, that the various reports which have found their way into the newspapers are unau thorized by him—and regrets the incorrect statement which the correspondent of the Gcor- j gian gave concerning ( (i. Y\ aril’s conduct in i the affiay—that whatever offensive remarks he ; may have made concerning Col. Ward in rcla- ] tion to the affair, he cheerfully retracts as he is ! fully satisfied upon the statement of Col. Ward j of their injustice—that from his acquaintance! with Col. Ward he views him to be an honors-! ble man, and incapable of inflirting wanton injury on any person, and is now satisfied ‘.hat Col. Ward had no intention when he went to his house to injure either his person or property, that at the time he shot Col. Ward it was done in a moment of excitement and under a mis conception of Col. Ward’s intention. Having j thus come to an amicable understanding, they j mutually express their readiness to bury what has past and’do mutually retract any expression growing out of the affair, and agree to take no measures in any way to the injuiy of either and ;to discountenance any on the part of their res pective friends; that hereafter they will meet as iif the transaction had never happened being mutuallv satisfied with the above explanations. S. ROCKWELL, 0. 11. KENAN, A. H. KENAN, YOUNG JOIINSTON, Miliedgeville, Dec. G, 1833. fcjr*The newspapers in the State are reques ted to re-publish the above and particularly thoso who have given place to tho unfounded rumor in relation to the transaction. [From the Georgia Times.] The Mighty Workshop, I Deccmbe 4th, 1833. ) Air. Editor. —l have lately seen in your papqy, the result of the election before the legis lature now in session, for a Brigadier General | for the 2d Brigade 9th Division of the Georgia ! Milita; and I must confess although I had been : as much attached to the title of Col. as Ja ‘k Downing is to that of Major, yet I never had ! any idea of being Generalized until I saw the I very respectable vote I got on that occasion. It is true that Major Ector of Meriwether, bang’d um out of all hollow, and Major Down ing beat me a little but the way I thrower! the j “Democratic yeoman” Zip Coon, Jim Crow, 1 Jumpup Joe, Cleat de Kitchen, Nullification, Jake Funk and Tom Harris tn the shade, was a \ sin to the whole Crocket family. It seems that Major Jack Downing of Downingsville, Mili. tia was right when he said that Majors were the most lucks fellows in the world for I beat’ era all except the two Major’s so bad th it the did’nt know themselves from i side of sole leather: I happened to s:ep in just as old We : counted out the wotes as he calls uni, an th way Tom Harris, looked after his deteat t* a awful—l did’nt care three straws about it no I way, for I am confident that I shall never nit in anv higher office than 1 am, till all the Major - are served—l only wish it had ben my lor . have been a Major instead of a C lonel, I ’“El then have beat all creation for any sort of .tu office ; n this country for you see Old Jake Wood is President of the Senate anrl he was a Major, or else ho would never have been thought of for that office for he can’t even see through a mill stone after the eye is pecked with out his quizing glass—l wish Mr. Editor you could just see him looking through it at Dr. Cuthbert when he roads bills to the Senate he holds up his glass before his eye, which by tho bye is, just as red as a Jay-bird’s bill m Pok ■- berry time, shuts the other eye, rinkles his nose and grins severe enough to grin the Doc. tor’s wig clean off'of his head which would give 1 an external demonstration of what was internally concealed. We have another election nere’ next week for more Generals for the Cherokee nation. I believe as how I ruu so well before with’ ut mv name having been regularly announ. ccd, I will try um again—as the Editor of the i Weste-n Herald justly remarked in a late i number oflns paper, “there is no telling r.hat ’ this legislature will do.” N. B. The superintendant and all wo few a\:d feeble auxiliaries are well, so no more ut pres, ent, but rfemain yours &c. COL. TOM TROTT. A Bundle of Coincidence. —The Salem Re gister of yesterday, hns the following para graphs, detailing certain wo derful coinciden ces connected with the lato phenomenon of snooting stars, It appears that Capt. Hammond, of ship Restitution,and his crew, arrived at this port last week from Palermo, have had the extraordinary good fortune of witnessing this wonderful phe. nomenon tivice within a year —the ship being in our bay on Wednesday morning, bound in. They s”w the meteors as early as 12 o’clock, and viewed them till daylight. The appearance of the heavens was very similar to that of an occurrence which happended exactly on the same day of the mouth and year, at Mocha, in the Red Sea, whrire they went for pepper. Captain Hammond thus describes the sight at Mocha, in an extract from his journal, written at the time. “Aor;. 13/A, 1532. —From lA. M. until af ter daylight this morning, there was a very un. Osual phenomenon in the heavens. It appear ed like meteors buisting in every direction.— The sky at the time clear, tho stars and moon being, with sir. aks of light, and thin white clouds interspersed in the sky. Ongoing on! shore in tho morning, I enquired of the Arabs it j they had noticed the above ; they said they had been observing it most of the night. I asked them if the like had cvr appeared before. The oldest of them replied that they had not. la’s. ked them, to what cause they attributed it? The j answer was “ they supposed the devil was ot wotk.” and they considered it an ill omen, which of course was mituial, as they were daily ex. pecting an army to besiege tho city. For the last six days, it Lu; been blowing a strong gale ( fioin the South—hazy weather, find sand <■ tao the air.” The Register also states as remarkable coin. ! cidenec.-, that the only three great meteoric showers on record, all took place on the moro. ing of Nov 13. viz:--In South America, Nov. j 13, 1779—at Mocha, Nov. 13, 1632—and in I the United Slates. Nov. 13 1833. The drawing of the little F motion Lottery was ! completed yestetdav. This closes the Land r Lot! ry process is Georgia; as the public land | is now ail disposed of. According to the last official returns 7COO convicts, condeifiu’-il to hard labor,’arc. now at the hulks of Brest, Rochefort, and Tou!*r. The hulks at L’Oricnt were suppressed in 183 ; at that time the number of convicts amounted t<> 8401. ‘he expense for the administration , and surveillance of the hulks, and for the main, teuancearid pay of the convicts, amount to 2.. j57!,566f. Tho product of the work done by the convicts is rated at 2,082,286f. This work consists in repairs, sawing of timber, &c. Thus the hulks cost the state about 400,000f. more than they bring in. At Toulon the convicts aro | employed for the most part in works requiring more intelligence, and the product of their lacor ; generally covers their expenses. Act v Hampshire Silk. —Mr. Frost, of Plain field N. 11. has made about halfa pound of silk this season from 1500 eggs. The weight of leaves consumed was 75 pounds which is just about the same portion consumed in Bavaria in the same process. No pains were taken in this case to chop the leaves, regulate the tempera, tore or secure the worms from the weather, which was unusually bad; and Mr. F. is “fully of opin. ion that the culture of silk is as easily learned as any other kind of business or art, and that many families in every town would find as pro. friable a reward for their labor as our rich far. nters do bv correspondent care and exertion.” We have no doubt of it. and we hope to seethe experiment seasonably and thoroughly tried.— Boston Jour. ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. 4< . ‘ !’:•• ABLY to an onler granted by the lionorab'o tin- inferior Court of Newton county, when sitting as a Court of Ordinary, will be sold on the first Tuesday ■-i March s', at the Court house in the town ofColuni hus, M uscogee county, Lot of Land No. 145, in the 324 District of originally Lee. now Muscogee county, beloug | ingto lie Estate ofEl iiabrthHudson,deceased Tortus I made known on the day of sale. JOHN HENRY, Adair. Dee. 21.—36-tds. GEORGIA, NEWTON COUNTY. WaT “~ 48 Nancy Fincher and John Clark, obp'y V v c-:-letters of administration, with the Wiil u-. . :” • <tatu ci John Fincher,lateofsaid coun — —efurr to cite and admonish 1 all and sin -1 -*•’ l creditors of said deceased, to b a a it fiice within the time prescribed by ■ a if any they have, why said letters ,’ ‘;■ . 1,.- -'ranted. - - ■ ■■ hand 11th December, 1533: L. HOPKINS, c. c. o. • Mr M tOd. LIST OF LETTERS R- in the Post office at New Bridge, unty. Georgia, which if not taken out li.-fo.--t 1 arch, 1834, will be sentto the General | Post li.-.-a as dad letters. i ’. ’William Nisoon, Mr. Crnmwr-11. Daniel Nicelur. Lina Cooper, . Q. David C. Cherov,2. It’iii a ill Oweas. I so - Clonse, Iloland Osborn, William E. * arson, Christnia Ogles, James B Chick. F. E. Stephen If. Philips, James Kllege. Benj. Parke, 2. F. John H. Piicr. Willson Furr. G. J. Isaac Quails. ! Joel Jones. R. L. Thomas B. Rush, I \\ aliam Lindsey, 2. S. ! Robert 1 . ‘ .one] William Stocks, i Horace Laurens, Junes & Cathy Spencci,’ M. Snow & Taturn. I Martin Makanson, T. ! William M’Kinzie, Hardy C. Tatum. ■viiliani’ ’<'lure. Esq. Samuel Tatom, V. A. M’laiu-rhlin, Hughs Torbctt, John M'Daniel. \y. N. David Weaver. A. li. BLACKWELL, P. M. I Dec. 2t. -38— 3t- NOTICE lERFJSY forewarn all persons from trading fora note ofliand given by me to William Strickland on . the Gib of July, 1833, for -lu dollars dua’2sth ofDcfleraber 1833 The consideration for which said note was given, having entirely failed I am determined not to pay it. JOSEPH W. MULLOY. Dec. 21, —36—2t J fist P bit shed at this office. TIIE GEORGIA ALMANAC-. FOR 1804: BY ROBEUT GRIER, OODF.RS from any part of the State will meet with prompt attoni ion, feuchofour.countrv, subscribers as wish n copy can have one sent by male? The price is fixed at 12 1-2 cents per single copy, or $5 per Groce. December 21 —36—ts. [Cctistitutiona/ist. PROSPECTS OF THE COLUMBUS ENQUIRER, NEW SERIES. By M. B. Lamar, and IV. li. Tinsley. Fill iM the commencement of the ensuing year, tr.i CoLCHBfs E.s-ftPiKER will be published by Min— beau B. Lamar and iJiiam B. Tinslev. in support of the prmcipl. sos the “State Rights party of Georgia,” as an nounced in the Preamble and Resolutions of the Stale Rights meeting in MillodgtviUc, November 13, 1833, which arc already before the pubbcjiscolumns however* 4 not he devoted cxchi iv ! to politics; hut such attention shall beg-veil to Literary and Miscellaneous Selections, Comuricmi and Foreign News, and Gen. Intelligence as to make it acci ptabß as possible to every class of real dorr. Tits ENueißr.it will he printed with entirely new ma terials, and oa th-- t- st paper used ir. this country,for sucii publications. The change of- ditonand the contemplated improve ment cf the paper haw been m..dc the oecasiod of issuing u prospectus lor increasing its patronage and extending its re.eolation. Those friendly to thecausc which it writ advocate are requested to give circulation to this notice, in their respective counties. Terms —i hree I'ollarß p* r annum, payable in auraSfu or Four Dollars-snot pa*d nrilim tli ! November, 20.’